2. Notice the trend in world population. When did it
really start to take off? How does this coincide with
second wave civilizations?
3.
4. I. Empires and Civilizations in Collision:
The Persians and the Greeks
A. The Persian Empire
1. King of Kings: Cyrus & Darius
Exercised absolute power over their subjects, including
life and death.
Also enjoyed a lavish lifestyle of elaborate rituals and
palaces.
Claimed complete control over their entire domain and
saw their centralized state as absolute.
5. Persian Empire -
Multiculturalism
The Persian monarchs did not rule by force alone. They
used an efficient system of regional administrators
known as satraps and respected the diverse cultures
and religions of the various people they conquered.
6. Persian Empire: Infrastructure
Sophisticated administrations set the pattern
for some 1,000 years for the numerous
successor regimes in the region.
Of particular note were the empire’s 1,700-
mile “royal road,” its postal system, forms of
taxation, court etiquette, and bureaucracy.
7.
8. I. Empires and Civilizations in Collision:
The Persians and the Greeks
9. Empires and Civilizations in Collision: The
Persians and the Greeks
• Hellenes: Common identity as Hellenes, sharing language, religion, and
rituals. Starting in 776 B.C.E., they held the Olympic Games every four
years as a festival celebrating their shared identity.
• City-states: Despite pan-Hellenic ideals, there was endemic rivalry
amongst the various city-states and near constant warfare. Many states
had very different forms of organization. The contrast between Athenian
democracy and Spartan martial communalism illustrated the extremes.
Generally these city-sates were small with only 500 to 5,000 male citizens,
but they did see economic dynamism, which could lead to environmental
degradation and soil depletion such as around Athens.
• Expansion by migration: Like the Persians, the Greeks were dynamic and
expansive. However, their expansion came about by waves of migration
around the Mediterranean and Black Seas between 750 and 500 B.C.E.
These migrations spread Greek culture, language, and architecture.
• Citizens and hoplites: The Greeks pioneered revolutionary political ideas
such as viewing the individual as a participant of a larger state system, a
citizen. The tradition of hoplite warfare existed, where men who could afford
armor served as infantry. These hoplites soon demanded political rights
and challenged elites or tyrants.
10. Collision: The Greco-Persian Wars
Ionia: This was a contested area of western Anatolia where Greek city-states
had been annexed by the Persian Empire. When they revolted with the
help of Athens, the Persians sought to punish the rebels and their supporters
in the Greek mainland.
Athens: Victorious, democratic, and imperial: Against all odds, Athens
led a coalition of Greek city-states to victory in land and sea engagements in
490 and 480 B.C.E. This was a source of great pride for Athenian citizens
who saw their political system as a source of their victory. As a consequence
of the victory, citizenship was extended to the lower classes who fought the
Persians; Athens pursued a policy of empire building.
Impact: Little impact on the Persians (beyond embarrassment of defeat)
but major impact on Greeks, especially Athens. Great source of enormous
pride for the Greeks (especially celebration of Battle of Marathon).
Athenians saw their victory as proof of the superiority of their freedoms.
Also led to the notion of an “East West divide”
11. • Athens’ Golden Age; Greek victory radicalized Athenian democracy
and poorer classes petitioned for full citizenship. The fifty years after
Greek victory in the Greco-Persian wars led to building of Parthenon,
birth of Greek theater, philosophy of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
• The Peloponnesian War, 431–404 B.C.E.: Democratic or not,
Athenian empire building directly led to conflicts with other Greek
city-states. The Peloponnesian War was essentially a civil war between
Athens and its allies and Sparta and its allies. In the end, Athens lost
and Greece was exhausted, opening the way for a Macedonian
invasion.
• Sparta takes lead in defending traditional Greek city states against
Athenian system of democracy. Sparta will defeat Athens but it opens
the way to outside invasion by Macedonia (Philip & his son
Alexander)
12.
13. Empires and Civilizations in Collision: The Persians and the Greeks
Collision: Alexander and the Hellenistic Era
1. Philip II and Alexander
– Philip of Macedonia invaded a weakened Greece and forced unity
upon the quarrelsome city-states. His son, Alexander, led a
massive Greek invasion of the Persian Empire.
– In a decade of frenetic activity, Alexander claimed numerous
military victories, destroyed the Persian capital at Persepolis, and
ventured as far as present Afghanistan and India before his death in
323 B.C.E.
2. Spread of Greek culture
• While his empire soon broke into several pieces, Alexander
opened the way for Greek culture to spread east.
• Greek influences can be found as far away as India where the
monarch Asoka published some decrees in Greek and a new style
of art showed Greek techniques.
14. Alexandria and Bactria
• With its large multiethnic population and
numerous monuments, Alexandria stands out as
the most dynamic symbol of the Hellenistic Era.
• Bactria, high in the mountains of Central Asia,
shows the far flung influences of Greek culture but
also the fusion of Greek and eastern cultures, seen
in the Greek monarchs who practiced Buddhism.
• While there was sharing of cultures, ethnic
conflict could erupt and some, such as orthodox
Jews, tried to resist the Hellenization of their
people.
15.
16. II. Comparing Empires: Roman and Chinese
A. Rome: From City-State to Empire
1.An upstart republic –
– not geographically predestined to be a super power; was fairly weak & poor in early
years; but conquered & incorporated neighboring territories throughout the
Mediterranean & much of France, Britain & Spain as well as Egypt, Greece &
Mesopotamia.
– Roman Aristocrats overthrew the monarchy and established a republic of the wealthy
(patricians).
– Eventually established law codes that protected poorer classes (plebians).
2.An expansionist warrior society
– Near constant warfare & Empire Building
– Roman army enjoyed special privileged status.
– Poor soldiers sought land, loot, and salaries that could be a path out of poverty, and elites
sought large estates and political glory.
– Many vanquished people brought into Rome as slaves.
– No pre-arranged plan for imperial expansion, but push factors and much of Roman
society enjoyed a variety of war spoils.
– With each imperial expansion, Romans faced a new set of security issues, requiring what
they saw as expansion to create defenses.
17. Rome: From City-State to Empire
• Changing gender norms
– Under the republic, Roman gender norms emphasized the power of the male
head of the household, the pater familias.
– However, with the social and political changes brought about by imperial
expansion, many elite women found a less restricted life than they had known
in the early centuries of the Republic.
• Civil war and the death of the republic
– Unfortunately for social stability, imperial expansion served to widen gaps in
wealth. Roman elites acquired larger and larger estates worked by foreign
slaves.
– Free farmers were unable to compete, and growing numbers left the
countryside for the city where they found more poverty or joined the army.
– Elite generals began to recruit from the poorer ranks of society.
– As conflict grew between traditionalists and those who enjoyed new wealth,
civil war soon broke out.
– After decades of fighting, Octavian gained the title of Augustus and ruled as an
emperor.
– This first emperor had to play a careful political game, preserving the symbols
of the republic despite his near absolute power.
18.
19. II. Comparing Empires: Roman and Chinese
B. China: From Warring States to Empire
•Qin Shihuangdi’s brutal quest for order
– Empire building in China was not the creation of a new idea but an attempt to go
back to the time of coherence and centralization of centuries past.
– Plagued by generations of warfare amongst the various states, many hoped that
one state would establish order.
– The state of Qin, with its strong bureaucracy and army, took the lead. Qin
Shihuangdi, took the title of “first emperor” and united China by force,
executing scholars who opposed him and governing by the concept of Legalism,
an all-powerful state that imposed harsh penalties as a means of enforcing the
authority of the state.
– He also established a standardized and uniform system of weights,
measurements, cart axels, and Chinese characters.
21. II. Comparing Empires: Roman and Chinese
• The moralistic and moderate Han
– Because of Qin Shihuangdi’s harsh tactics, the
Qin dynasty (221–206 B.C.E) was short lived, but
it did set the key political precedents and patterns
for 2,000 years of imperial rule.
– The Han dynasty (206 B.C.E.–220 C.E.) used Qin
infrastructure but adopted the moralistic and
scholarly ideology of Confucianism in lieu of Qin
Shihuangdi’s brutal Legalism as a state ideology.
– Not only were they a much longer-lived dynasty,
but they also expanded the empire’s territory.
22. How would you describe this painting?
What is this image trying to tell?
23.
24. II. Comparing Empires: Roman and Chinese
C. Consolidating the Roman and Chinese Empires
1. Supernatural sanctions:
– Both the Chinese and the Roman empires argued that supernatural forces
sanctioned their regimes.
– In Rome, past emperors were revered as gods. In China, the emperors ruled in
accordance with the spiritual force known as the Mandate of Heaven.
– If the Chinese emperor did not rule well, the Mandate of Heaven could be lost
and natural disasters and social upheaval might dispose the dynasty.
2. Absorbing foreign religion:
– Both Rome and China dealt with foreign religions.
– From the east, Christianity, Persian, and Egyptian faiths entered the Roman
empire.
– Christianity eventually spread amongst the Roman elite, especially women.
These faiths spread thanks to Roman transportation systems and the relative
peace imposed by the empire.
– In China, Buddhism came from India and Central Asia via the Silk Roads. The
faith gained adherents after the collapse of the Han dynasty.
25. Consolidating Chinese & Roman Empires
3. Paths to assimilation:
– As the Han dynasty grew out of a large cultural heartland that was
already ethnically Chinese, it was easy to assimilate the cultures of
conquered peoples.
– Romans, on the other hand, remained a minority in their
increasingly multiethnic empire. However, Rome began to grant
citizenship to cooperative individuals, families, and whole
communities and eventually to all free people of the empire.
4. The use of language:
– Latin, as an alphabet-based language, spread throughout the west
of the empire but later transformed into regional variations that
became the Romance Languages (Spanish, French, Italian, and so
on). In contrast, Chinese is character based, and pronunciation
varied widely throughout the empire. Nonetheless, literate Chinese
could read the characters regardless of regional differences in the
oral language.
26. Consolidating Chinese & Roman Empires
5. Bureaucracy versus aristocracy:
– The Han state developed a strong and successful
bureaucracy based on political and philosophical principles.
– The Chinese state emphasized the morality of the governing
classes.
– Romans, on the other hand, relied on the aristocracy and
military to piece various systems of rule together and create
laws.
– While Romans desired good laws, the Chinese state wanted
good men.
27.
28. II. Comparing Empires: Roman and Chinese
D. The Collapse of Empires
1. Over-extension: The most fundamental reason for the collapse of Han and
Roman was over-expansion. The empires simply got too big for the existing
infrastructure to hold them together. Unable to control outlying areas or
suppress rebellions, the end became inevitable.
2. Rivalries amongst elites: Elite rivalries (between mandarins and eunuchs in
China and among elites claiming the throne in Rome) weakened the state and
contributed to political collapse.
3. Pressures from nomadic people: Added to these factors were pressures
from nomadic people of the steppes and the German lands who pushed into
imperial territory, competed for resources, and challenged central authority.
4. Revival?: In both China and Europe, there were memories of empire and the
dream of imperial revival. China did see the reconstruction of an imperial state,
but Rome was never really rebuilt.
29.
30. III. Intermittent Empire: The Case of India
A. The Aryan Controversy
– After the decline of the Indus civilization, a wave of Indo-Europeans
came into India. There is still much debate on the nature of their
history. Did they invade suddenly? Peacefully and slowly migrate?
Were they always there?
B. Political fragmentation and cultural diversity, but a
distinctive religious tradition
– Despite the numerous small states and meager imperial tradition
and despite the numerous languages and cultural traditions, there
were several distinct and significant religious traditions that formed
a common core that outsiders would come to call “Hinduism.”
C. Mauryan Empire (326-184 B.C.E.)
– This first Indian empire may have been inspired by contact with
Persia and the Hellenistic kingdoms. While impressive in size and
power (50 million subjects and 600,000 infantry soldiers, 30,000
cavalry, 8,000 chariots, and 9,000 war elephants), this empire was
not as long lived as Rome or Han.
31. • Ashoka (r. 268–232 B.C.E.): The most famous Indian emperor of the
age was at first a great conqueror but later converted to Buddhism,
adopting a moralistic tone and erecting numerous pillars and rocks
carved with his edicts.
• Gupta Empire (320–550 C.E.): It was well over half a millennium
before another state equaled the first empire. The Gupta Empire saw a
flourishing of art, architecture, and literature, as well as commerce and
the sciences.
• Great civilizational achievements without a central state: Despite a
significant imperial tradition due to political fragmentation and conflict,
South Asia was home to the growth of a significant long-distance trade
network, major spiritual movements, and recorded impressive work in
astronomy.
32.
33. IV. Reflections: Enduring Legacies of
Second-Wave Empires
A. Mao Zedong and Qin Shihuangdi
B. Ashoka in modern India
C. British imperial and Italian fascist uses of Rome